Missing 411-Western United States & Canada: Unexplained disappearances of North Americans that have never been solved: Volume 1

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Missing 411-Western United States & Canada: Unexplained disappearances of North Americans that have never been solved: Volume 1

Missing 411-Western United States & Canada: Unexplained disappearances of North Americans that have never been solved: Volume 1

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Since the information is so valuable, it’s only right that the books should be expensive. 2. The Books’ Primacy

Paulides, David (2011). Missing 411 Western United States and Canada. North Charleston, South Carolina: CreateSpace. pp.ix–x. ISBN 978-1466216297. If an area has been searched dozens of times, chances are the search was sufficient. Especially if the body wasn’t even found by dedicated searchers, but by random hikers or passersby after the search was over. This includes a number of cases of divers not finding the body, but random people on the shore finding it afterwards. Again without anyone seeing the body get in. What should be done first is a comparison with the distribution of times at which people from a random non-Missing 411 sample disappear in the same areas. Given that the smallest useful sample is about 100 people, it would have to be for a whole U.S. state at least, or for all national parks in a country, since the largest cluster in the Yosemite is currently in the 50s, I believe. Without that, there’s no point in speculating any further.He said that the missing people were disappearing in mysterious circumstances and wanted David to investigate. Similarly, I would also like to see a chart of Missing 411 cases by date of disappearance, or ideally both date and time, so that there’s more to compare again with normal disappearances, and in the case of dates, also with tourist and hunting seasons, like any numbers of how many tourists or hunters can be found in the forest at what time of year. If those exact statistics aren’t available, similar ones should exist to give us an estimate. And sure, tests have to be named something and there is a limited number of letters in the alphabet. Granted, Elisa Lam is a rare name, so it’s a case of a rare name of a test that is the same as a human name, which was the same as a rare name of a person who died unusually, while the test was being used at the time and place where they died. That’s roughly a bit odd to the fourth power. The unusual death following a plot of a movie, an unusual plot, moves this coincidence to about a bit odd to the sixth power. How odd is enough? If I think about how likely it is that this profile point signifies something unusual, the inside-out clothing is very hard to explain away, but the brightly colored clothing may have a mundane explanation. Anything that makes you more visible from a longer distance by default makes you an easier target for any kind of predator, animal, human, or otherwise. So, I would expect more people to get lost while wearing colorful clothing rather than natural shades or camo. However, after they get lost, I would expect more people with colorful clothing to be found, as it cuts both ways.

They may run away from home, take a trip without telling anyone, or get lost while hiking or camping. If these coincidences seem pedestrian or contrived to you, brace yourself. In the case Elisa Lam’s death, around the time of her death, NIH was using a test called LAM-ELISA in the area to deal with a tuberculosis outbreak. Not only that, the details of her death, especially how she was found dead in a water tank on the roof of a hotel, mirrored the plot of a Japanese horror movie called Dark Water from 2002, remade in 2005 (Elisa died in 2013). Peterson, Judy (March 12, 2012). "Los Gatos author explores 'Missing 411' from national parks". The Mercury News. Archived from the original on July 5, 2021 . Retrieved November 29, 2018. All of which are attributes that should be connected with strange disappearances, if you think about it. If there already was a history of people getting lost or being found dead hundreds of years ago, maybe there always were hunting grounds of local predators, maybe there always was a settlement of local “wild men”, or maybe something about the natural environment itself was always potentially deadly to visitors. Maria was abducted from her home in Sycamore, Illinois, and her body was found five months later in a wooded area near Galena.Marsh, Roger (September 26, 2013). "Missing Person Cases: Never Be Last in Line". The Huffington Post. Archived from the original on August 20, 2014 . Retrieved August 19, 2014.



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